By Danny Rubinstein"Nesikh yerushalayim" ("The Prince of Jerusalem") by Ofer Regev, Porat Publishing, 278 pages, NIS 63 Just after 5 P.M. on Friday afternoon, September 17, 1948, during the final months of the War of Independence, a jeep blocked the small cavalcade of cars in which the United Nations mediator for Palestine, Swedish diplomat Count Folke Bernadotte, was riding. Bernadotte was on his way from the office of the UN High Commissioner in Armon Hanatziv, east of Jerusalem's Talpiot neighborhood, to the Rehavia home of the military governor of West Jerusalem, Dov Joseph. The cavalcade screeched to a halt on Palmach Street (before it was called by that name), on the edge of Katamon - which was empty of Arabs by this time - in front of what is today apartment building No. 17.
Three young men, only identified decades later, leaped out of the jeep. Two of them, Yitzhak Ben Moshe and Avraham Steinberg, shot at the tires of the UN vehicles. The third, Yehoshua Cohen, opened the door of Bernadotte's car and shot him at close range. The bullets also hit a French officer who was sitting beside him, Colonel Andre Gerot. Both were killed.
Within minutes, the whole thing was over. The assassins fled, with a fourth accomplice, Meshullam Makover, in the driver's seat. No one was ever brought to trial. An organization called Hazit Hamoledet (Homeland Front) took responsibility for the act. Actually this was a cover name for a cell affiliated with the pre-state underground militia - the Lehi - in Jerusalem, under the command of Yehoshua Zetler.
Dozens of books, research studies and articles have been published about this shocking episode over the years. Many have tried their hand at analyzing the dramatic political assassination of a scion of the Swedish royal family. Now Ofer Regev has jumped on the bandwagon with a book that examines the events from the perspective of the two main characters: the assassin, Yehoshua Cohen (Regev, like many other Israelis who have written on the subject, avoids calling him a "murderer") and his victim, Count Bernadotte.
Regev describes Cohen and Bernadotte in lively prose, but makes it clear, almost from the very first page, that he detests Bernadotte. On the other hand, he is a supporter, even a fan, of Cohen. While that may be legitimate, the book is riddled with inaccuracies, large and small. This is unfortunate, considering that the author has consulted a very long list of sources and quotes from them freely. The errors in the book could easily have been avoided. Regev writes, for example, that Moshe Sharett spent his childhood in the village of Ein Siniya, north of Ramallah, where he was friendly with the neighbor's son, Amin al-Husseini, later the mufti of Jerusalem. That is highly unlikely. Ein Siniya may have been the village of the wealthy Al-Husseini clan, but not the branch of the family the mufti belonged to, and it is doubtful he ever spent time here.
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